Monday, November 15, 2010

RED ALERT FOR FOOD AND HEALTH FREEDOM! Stop S.510 Passing on WEDNESDAY

RED ALERT! S.510 WILL PASS ON WEDNESDAY
UNLESS WE PUSH BACK HARD NOW!

http://www.healthfreedomusa.org/?p=7446

Campaign for Libertybroke the story earlier today [Monday 11.15.10] that S.510, the horrific, fake “food safety” bill (and possibly its evil companions, S.3767 and the discredited S.3002) will be pushed through the Lame Duck Congress this week. It is definitely on the Obama Lame Duck Agenda. Our friends in DC have confirmed this.

Update: 11.15.10 10 PM: Tea Party Nation reports: “On Wednesday, there will be a cloture vote on Senate bill S.510.”

IT IS URGENT THAT EVERY HEALTH AND FOOD FREEDOM GROUP WARN THEIR SUPPORTERS AND FLOOD CONGRESS WITH “NO S.510!” MESSAGES, STARTING NOW!

Please forward this message widely. Please "take the Action Item" below each day this week, for each person in your family!

If you need information about the bills, see our Talking Points here:
http://www.healthfreedomusa.org/?p=6910

Our action item, to email US Senators, is here:
http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/568/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=4613

THIS IS A RED ALERT! WE MUST FLOOD THE SENATE NOW!
Last November 150,000 emails held the bill in committee for nearly a year;
WE NEED EVEN MORE PUSH BACK RIGHT NOW!

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Who the Hell is Serco?

Serco is probably the biggest company you have never heard of! They control the lion's share of the world's key services including many nations air traffic, banking, transport, immigration, ballistic missiles defence, prisons, schools and more, especially in Australia, the UK and the USA. I'm not real comfortable with that... how does it make you feel?

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Robert Kiyosaki on the Unfolding Economic Decline

Robert Kiyosaki on the Alex Jones Show 19 October 2011.

Here and in the videos that follow it, Kiyosaki explains how government and corporations are screwing ordinary citizens, who are basically falling prey to the rich, and what you can do to prevent yourself becoming just another impoverished statistic.

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Greening the Desert Using Permaculture

You couldn't imagine a more inhospitable place to try and establish productive plant growth. When Geoff Lawton first began the attempt, people laughed at him and said it couldn't be done. They laughed even harder when they saw all the "non-productive" hardy legumes he planted first. But Geoff had the last laugh when his Permaculture methods bore fruit, even to the extent of removing active salt from the soil.

Saturday, November 6, 2010

Learning from Weeds on Permaculture Farms

Observation is an important part of Permaculture practice, and here are a few things it has taught me about weeds on our property this spring.

Have a close look at this photo. It shows a tree on a property adjacent to our own. The purple stuff is the weed “Paterson’s Curse” (PC). Do you notice that there is no PC under the tree? When you look closely you will see that this has nothing at all to do with sunlight – the ground is PC-free not just in the shady area under the tree, but within its entire dripline.

What is that telling us? What is different about the soil under the tree?

That tree is probably about 200 years old, so you’d have 200 years accumulation of feces from insects, reptiles and birds under it. So first clue about PC – it doesn’t grow where the fertility is high, favoring low fertility soils.

Here’s another photo showing either side of a fence on our property.

Both areas have been fertilized using organic materials according to Albrecht soil test results.

On the left is grazed land inside a paddock, on the right of the fence is the verge of our driveway that is not grazed but slashed each year.

After only 3 years of different treatment the contrast in amount of PC is astounding. What I am reading in this is that (over) grazing favors PC and slashing deters it.

Again we are probably talking about fertility – grazing removes some of the protective mulch from the soil surface, drying it out and retarding biological activity. Slashing has the opposite effect.

The top right of the photo shows a neighbor’s property thick with PC. It has been neither fertilized nor grazed (except by kangaroos). To me that suggests that prescriptive fertilization is the single biggest step you can take to favor the growth of useful pastures over weeds on your property.

Here’s another one that underlines this:


Both sides of this fence are grazed paddocks on our property. The only difference between them is in the amount of grazing pressure: the paddock on the left is properly fenced so has been grazed harder than the one on the right which has only temporary electric fencing that kept our ram in briefly …until the grass elsewhere started looking greener (we have since eaten the bugger which certainly taught him a lesson!). Neither side was ever slashed, so slashing is not absolutely necessary to deter PC.

What do all these things add up to? To me, they are saying that this weed (like many) appears where it is needed to restore fertility. If a combination of improvements are made to the health of the soil – such as adding strategic fertility amendments, and ensuring adequate pasture cover by not overgrazing – the weed disappears, making way for higher quality pasture plants. Conversely, damage the soil in any way, such as by overgrazing in our case, and the weed is there to repair the damage. In soils lacking in some essential nutrients, the weed that flourishes very often is able to harvest the lacking nutrients from very deep in the soil profile (and, some would argue, by less understood pathways), concentrating them in the tissues of the weed.

Australian farmer Peter Andrews made use of these valuable functions of weeds to bring the denuded landscape of his farm “back from the brink”. He explains how he did it in his book by the same name.

NIA Predicts Massive Hikes in Food Prices this Xmas

Brace yourself and your pocket for the coming festive season....

NIA, the US based National Inflation Association, projects that at the average U.S. grocery store it will soon cost $11.43 for an ear of corn, $23.05 for a 24 oz loaf of bread, $77.71 for 11.30 oz of roast coffee, $45.71 for a 64 fl oz container of orange juice, and $15.50 for a 1.55 oz chocolate candy bar.

The report highlights how despite the recent spectacular hike in food commodity prices - cotton rising by 54%, corn rising by 29%, soybeans rising by 22%, orange juice rising by 17%, and sugar rising by 51% during the months of September and October alone - these huge increases have yet to make their way into America's grocery stores because corporations have been reluctant to be the first to pass these price increases along to the consumer.

Want to learn more?

NIA's special U.S. food price projection report is now available to download for free at
:
http://inflation.us/foodpriceprojections.pdf

People who are growing their own food (and you don't need a lot of space to do this... learn how here) and forging caring links with others in their local community will be best placed to weather the coming hyperinflation.

Friday, November 5, 2010

How to Build a Permaculture Swale

Geoff Lawton demonstrates the theory and construction of a swale in this video.

A swale is a water harvesting ditch that has a soft mound on the lower slope and follows a natural contour of the land very precisely.

Swales are built to slow down the flow of water and hold it for as long as possible on the property. They allow water to soak gently into the surrounding landscape and rehydrate the soil profile.

When you build a swale you should plant it immediately to take advantage of and fully utilize the moisture rather than allowing it to become a waterlogging hazard downslope. A diverse and “stacked” array of pioneer species (short to long-lived nitrogen-fixing herbage, shrubs and trees) are usually planted, interspersed with hardy or reticulated food producing plants grown on the raised lower bed of the swale. In this way a food forest system can be created, adding value, beauty and natural abundance to your property.

Swales are maintained by slashing weeds and the protein rich foliage of the pioneer species and dumping it into the swale trench to mulch and rot.